Penn Jillette apologizes
famously-silent partner Teller and “shut it.”
Critch walked back his criticism after Jillette explained he was a setting up a comedic “bit” that got cut off.
“Wasn’t hating you,” Critch tweeted. “(I) have dealt with these stereotypes all my life. Curious as to what this ‘bit’ was going to be.”
In the 24 hours after the show aired, Jillette tweeted more than 130 remorseful and often self-flagellating messages the people of Newfoundland.
He referred to himself as an “idiot” in 50 tweets, and used variations on the words “sorry,” “fail” and “wrong” more than 200 times combined.
“I apologize to people of my favorite place, Newfoundland, and my family for screwing up on Real Time,” he tweeted. “May I apologize without apologizing or mitigating to the people of Newfoundland. I was wrong. Wrong wrong wrong wrong wrong.”
Jillette also apologized for a “sloppy” apology, then apologized to his two million Twitter followers for clogging their feeds with apologies.
Several Newfoundlanders forgave Jillette for the slight, some inviting him back to the island to make amends in person.
“You’re a typical Newf,” one Twitter user wrote. “No control over what comes outta ya gob.”
The well-known skeptic has written about his family’s origins in a passage of his book “God, No!” in which he reflects on the notion of identity.
“Being proud of some imaginary group you were born into seems insane and wrong,” wrote Jillette. “I went back to Newfoundland to see where my grandfather grew up, but I’m not a Newfoundland American.
“I’m Penn Jillette ... who didn’t even do well in Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey the Greatest Show on Earth Clown College.”
Jillette said he plans to address the Newfoundland controversy on an upcoming episode of his podcast “Penn’s Sunday School.”
Teller, meanwhile, has remained characteristically silent on the issue.